In honor of International Women’s Day in March, a small bronze statue of a “Fearless Girl” with a defiant, hands-on-hips appearance was placed opposite the famed “Charging Bull” statue that has become synonymous with Wall Street, and liberal feminists were overjoyed at the overtly political statement.

But the New York Post reported that at least one artist was none too pleased by the placement of the girl in front of the bull, and decided to make a statement of his own by creating an addition to the statuary, in this case a small dog with it’s leg hiked next to the little girl, aptly titled “Pissing Pug.”

“This is corporate nonsense,” sculptor Alex Gardega said of the “Fearless Girl” statue, saying it was commissioned as a publicity stunt by the Boston-based investment firm State Street Global Advisors. “It has nothing to do with feminism, and it is disrespect to the artist that made the bull. That bull had integrity.”

To signify his decided lack of appreciation for the “Fearless Girl” statue, which he viewed as a downgrade from the “Charging Bull,” he said he purposely crafted the “Pissing Pug” poorly to add to the statement he was making.

“I decided to build this dog and make it crappy to downgrade the statue, exactly how the girl is a downgrade on the bull,” Gardega told the Post.

In response to the “Pissing Pug” addition to the “Fearless Girl,” the U.K. Independent reported, State Street released a statement that declared: “Fearless Girl was created to stand as a reminder that having more women in leadership positions positively contributes to overall performance and strengthens our economy.”

As could be expected, liberal feminists were outraged by the poorly crafted pooch, with some calling the sculpture “disgusting,” others simply lashing out at the sculptor or men in general (surprise, surprise), issuing faux concern regarding “male fragility” and insinuating that men were intimidated by the statue of the girl.

According to Fortune, the “Pissing Pug” only lasted for a couple of hours next to the “Fearless Girl” before the artist removed it after it had been kicked several times by angry passers-by.

“It’s basically there to advertise an index fund,” Gardega explained to Fortune of the “Fearless Girl” statue. “It’s kind of just corporate advertising which I think has totally ruined the Bull.”

The sculptor of the “Fearless Girl,” Kristen Visbal, did not respond to Post requests for comment regarding the “Pissing Pug.” Arturo DiModica, sculptor of the “Charging Bull,” who has voiced his displeasure over the girl being placed in front of his bull, declined to comment to the newspaper as well.

But Gardega had plenty to say about the “Fearless Girl’s” placement near DiModica’s piece.

“The statue invades the space of [DiModica’s] artwork, and so I was showing that by invading that sculpture’s space with my little dog,” he said. “I’m in his corner.”

Gardega also stated that, though he has removed it for now, there is a good chance that the “Pissing Pug” could make a return appearance next to the leg of the “Fearless Girl” again, perhaps within the next couple of weeks, though he admitted that he had basically accomplished his goal of raising awareness regarding the corporate nature of the artwork.

We aren’t entirely sure which aspect of this story is funnier, the fact that a small dog was peeing on the statue embraced by feminists or the hyperventilating outrage by those feminists that another sculptor adopted their own guerrilla artwork tactic to diminish their silly statue of a foolish girl standing in front of a massive bull.

Considering the meaning of the bull “Fearless Girl” would actually symbolize women blocking the progress of a roaring economy.

Probably not the message feminists intended to send, but nevertheless the one that was broadly received.